2 Permanent-magnet asynchronous electric motors – 20 kW each @ 700 rpm
Speed
7.5 kn (max); 5.5 kn (cruise)
Capacity
75 passengers
Crew
3
Aditya solar ferry in service
Aditya is a solar-powered ferry operating between Vaikom and Thavanakkadavu in the Indian state of Kerala. The boat was inaugurated by Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan and Union Minister for Power and Renewable Energy Piyush Goyal on 12 January 2017 at 5 pm.[1]
Construction began in 2016 at Navalt's Kochi facility and was completed the same year for about ₹2 crore (US$370,000).
Launched on 9 November 2016 and commissioned on 12 January 2017.
A Public Interest Litigation filed on 20 June 2016 had claimed a solar ferry would be “impossible to operate”, but the project's success disproved this and later won multiple international awards.
The hull was developed using extensive CFD analysis by Navgathi and AltEn to optimise hydrodynamics. Construction and testing were witnessed by the Technical Committee, IRS surveyor and Kerala Port Surveyor on 16 November 2016 at Aroor backwaters.[4]
FICCI Catapult Award 2017 – Best R&D Project That Can Be Scaled Up[12]
Legacy and broader impact
Aditya's success led KSWTD to plan conversion of all 48 diesel ferries to solar-electric systems.
As of 2025, Navalt Solar and Electric Boats has 73 projects worldwide – 35 vessels in operation and 38 under construction.
Geographic distribution: 68 in India (Kerala 47, Uttar Pradesh 6, Punjab 4, Maharashtra 3, Madhya Pradesh 2, six other states with 1 each), plus one each in Canada, Israel, Maldives and Seychelles.
By sector: Tourism 43, Passenger Transport 19, Fishing 6, Vehicle Transport 2, Workboats 2.
Navalt continues to expand with new models including Indra, Barracuda, Srav, Marsel and Destiny, and the Greenship modular platform for defence and commercial applications.
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